The Last Rodeo (#687)
Wow! What a contrast! After what felt like an endless array of horror films, I saw one that was 100% opposite. It was an old fashioned drama, a cowboy movie about family and love, devotion and sacrifice, faith and redemption, and I liked it. Even through it was obviously faith-based, it didn't overwhelm you or overdo it. THE LAST RODEO is the heartwarming story of a widowed former world champion bull rider who lives on a ranch with his daughter and grandson. When it is discovered that the grandson has a brain tumor (the same thing that took his wife), the costs involved with the operation are more than they can afford. He decides, against his daughter's strenuous objections, to compete in the upcoming world championship rodeo many years after he suffered a near fatal injury, which his daughter nursed him through. It's a story of courage we have seen lots of times but it worked once more in this film that was poignant and exciting. After the ending, the star (grandfather) makes an appeal to the audience to encourage others to see this picture—to come back to the theater which too many people deserted after the pandemic. It was well acted and produced and never dragged or became too sentimental in its nearly two hour length. There were no audience ratings but 75% of critics gave it a thumbs up. It deserved two thumbs, but then I'm an old fashioned kind of guy and a sucker for a tear jerker.
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